Seems to me you guys confer the title "Admiral" far too easily.just try to
make it a fun activity, racing can be fun for some but in my experience not
for all.warmth is important so get good gear. concentrate on reaching legs,
close reaches, beam reaches and broad reaches are easy, fast and fun.chose
your crew carefully.not everyone enjoys being on the water 

 

Dwight Veinot

C&C 35MKII, Alianna

Head of St. Margaret's Bay, NS

 

  _____  

From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Gary
Nylander via CnC-List
Sent: September 22, 2014 1:39 PM
To: Jean-Francois J Rivard; [email protected]
Subject: Re: Stus-List wife dosen't like it when the boat leans

 

I've been lucky. My first admiral was gung-ho for almost anything thrilling,
so sailing on the windows was not a problem. We used to take our Coronado 15
dinghy out into the ocean from Marina del Rey and up to Santa Monica and
back - surfing down the side of waves on the way back. (she then co-drove
the IMSA 911)....  

 

Second admiral was much the same way - another 911 person - now the co-owner
of Penniless - and running second in the Wednesday night B fleet (has a
first place trophy from a few years back).

 

Current admiral was raised by a father with an old Alden 46 yawl. After many
summers spent sanding and varnishing, he would take it out when the wind was
over 15, so it would move. Now, she doesn't like it when the rail is not
close to the waves.

 

As I said, I'm lucky.

 

Gary

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Jean-Francois J Rivard via CnC-List <mailto:[email protected]>  

To: [email protected] 

Sent: Monday, September 22, 2014 9:41 AM

Subject: Stus-List wife dosen't like it when the boat leans

 

I'm in the same boat (Pun intended) 

The kids dig it, every one except the dog and my wife loves to hang out on
the rail when the wind pipes up.  No matter how much I tell my wife that the
lake winds and little chop are not even close to being a challenge for a
boat that was meant for offshore racing / cruising she just sits there
worried..  

My biggest problem is that she does not participate much anymore.  The few
times she was grinding or doing something she kinda got into it.  We tried
her at the helm many times, she does not have much of a feel for it  and
typically looses focus which turns into luffing / half tacks..    When I try
to talk her through it, she takes it as a personal dig on her sailing
skills.  Obviously,  she's a bit short on skills, she's have never sailed
before. 

My next attempt is to get her to take lessons from the local guy at the
marina.  (We're overdue for formal stuff) I meant to do it last year but
much needed boat maintenance / updates drained the available funds.  I
figure (Hope) she'll be more receptive to the instructor's advice and
instructions. 

I think if we can get her busy on the boat, she'll enjoy it better. 

-Francois
1990 34+ "Take Five" 
Lake Lanier, Georgia


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